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reservations. We also do custom tours, for groups of any size.

Personal Travel in SicilyShouldn't your tailor-made vacation be arranged by your own travel expert in Sicily? Sicily Concierge will plan your trip from arrival to departure, whether
it's a one-day excursion or a one-week itinerary. You can expect real travel services from real travel agents. Start dreaming, and visit Sicily Concierge. Castles in the clouds are just the beginning.

Women of Sicily: Saints, Queens & Rebels. Meet a time­less sister­hood of pious Roman
maidens, stead­fast Sicilian queens, and a Jewish mother who faced the horrors of the Inquisi­tion. Find an island's feminine soul
in the first book about Sicily's historical women written in English by a Sicilian woman in Sicily. (224 pages on acid-free paper,
ebook available) Read more.

The Peoples of Sicily: A Multi­cultural Legacy. Full of Greeks, Arabs, Normans, Germans
and Jews, the most signif­icant general history of Sicily ever pub­lished is about much more than an island in the sun. Can the eclectic
medieval experience of the world's most conquered island be a lesson for our times? Find out as you meet the peoples! (368 pages on acid-free
paper, ebook available) Read more.

Welcome to the web's best Sicily reading list (we also have a page dedicated to Sicilian literature). If you're looking for real information and not just "tourist stuff" or the superficial, you've come to the
right page. This is the real deal – accurate, reliable information about the world's most eclectic island. These books treat subjects presented
on this site in far greater detail than we can. Links are to the US site, but if you're in Britain or elsewhere, sign in with your
password and get local delivery. Some of these titles are available as ebooks. We present
only brief descriptions here (some from Amazon or the publishers) because the Amazon sites offer so many reader reviews, but our selections
are the best books in print on these subjects, authored by experts who know Sicily. Prices vary based on edition: hardcover,
paperback, ebook. Some categories overlap a bit, and on the Amazon sites you'll find a few Kindle books which are not
published in "hard copy." It is our policy to review only those books that we have read and regard as accurate,
reliable or (in the case of fiction) entertaining. In other words, we choose not to publish negative reviews. If you were to read all the books recommended in the history, literature
and biography sections, you would be a virtual expert on Sicily. Benvenuti in Sicilia!

Travel & Touring Guides

Sicily Blue Guide. Wouldn't it be nice to have a travel guide that could be useful as a planning tool even before you
set foot in Sicily? This is it. Ellen Grady lives here and knows what she's talking
about. Read more.

Michelin Green Guide To Sicily. In
typical Michelin Guide fashion, this useful book's authors are anonymous, but their very traditional British
"Oxbridge" education in Greek classics shows through anyway. Read more.

Sicily: The Rough Guide Lots of user-friendly information on Sicilian
restaurants and hotels - more than Michelin which has the red guides for that.
Here the authors provide details on a whole range of places, and of course descriptions of the most important
sights. Read more.

Dorling Kindersley Eyewitness Travel Guide: Sicily. We love competition, and as
long as there are entries like this series, the authors of the other guides shouldn't plan on resting
on their literary laurels. At 240 pages, full of practical information of every kind:
Descriptions, history, culture, food, lodging. Read more.

General History

Sicily by John Julius Norwich. Released in 2015 with slightly differing titles for the UK and US markets, this is one of the
best general histories of our island published in the last twenty years. On finer points post-1800, one might beg to differ with a few of the
author's observations about the unification movement and its aftermath. History is not always
pretty, and scholars like Denis Mack Smith and Lucy Riall, among others, have written cogently about the effects of unification on Sicily (it seems difficult to
ignore things like Nino Bixio's massacre of civilians at Bronte or the kind of electoral fraud that results in a 99 percent majority). Aside from a (very) few details
of that kind, this is a superlative volume. Norwich's Oxbridgian writing style is captivating, almost intoxicating, and his knowledge of the European and
Mediterranean context of history is obvious. Having begun his writings about Sicily a half-century ago, he deserves kudos. This is the
real deal. Read more.

The Peoples of Sicily: A Multicultural Legacy by Louis Mendola and Jacqueline Alio. Covering
the periods to around 1500 – especially 1060 to 1260 – this is thought by at least three reviewers to be the best "general" history
of ancient and medieval Sicily published over the last few decades (the outline and chronology actually begin in antiquity). Its focus
is the Norman-Arab-Swabian era and the syncretic society that emerged from
the fusion of Fatimid, Byzantine, Northern European and Judaic cultures during the Middle Ages. Unlike most Sicilian histories, this one has a message, though the authors
leave its implications to the reader. It presents the longest Sicilian chronology (timeline) ever published, chapters on geography, religion and even
cuisine, a reading list, sources and a series of clear maps, along with tips on places of historical interest to visit. Except for a few observations in
the introduction and final chapter about multicultural societies, this is for the most part an informative conventional history, if an exceptionally insightful one, and probably the only general
history of Sicily pre-1500 that most readers will ever need. (We know the authors, who have written for this website.) Read more.

The Pursuit of Italy: A History of a Land, Its Regions, and Their Peoples by
David Gilmour. Insightful general history of Italy and its regions, equally divided between the periods before and after
1800, with ample attention given to Sicily. Highly readable and very revealing, a must if you want to understand
Italian history and the complex nation that exists today. Read more.

The Middle Sea: A History of the Mediterranean by John Julius Norwich. Norwich's wide range
includes books on Venice, Byzantium and the Normans in Sicily (see below). This one is required reading if you
seek to understand Sicily's complex, multicultural history - and especially its Phoenician, Greek, Roman, Byzantine and Arab periods. Every civilization covered here touched Sicily
in some way, whether it was the Egyptians (via the Phoenicians), the Jews (who settled in Syracuse), the Spanish peoples or the Ottoman Turks (who raided the island's
coasts beginning in the 16th century). The Middle Sea is the ideal book for context, and the island at the center of it all figures
prominently. Read more.

The Great Sea: A Human History of the Mediterranean by David Abulafia. Like Norwich's book (above),
a lengthy general survey by a highly popular author. While the topics and emphasis differ somewhat, Sicily is very present. An accomplished scholar,
Abulafia wrote the definitive biography of Emperor Frederick II (see below),
among other well-received works dealing with medieval Italy and Spain. Read more.

Sicily: A Cultural History by Joseph Farrell. A solid work which, though presented as a very general series of
historical and cultural facts and observations, is a very good complement to guide books and even to more detailed histories of Sicily (see the
following sections). It is also a useful historiography if you are seeking an outline indicating information relative to various historians, visitors and expert
commentators. Read more.

Ancient & Medieval History (pre-1500)

Phoenician Secrets: Exploring the Ancient Mediterranean by Sanford Holst. A fine, pragmatic
introduction to this unique civilization and its extensive influences on many societies, including an early presence in
Sicily. An enjoyable history. Read more.

Carthage Must Be Destroyed by Richard Miles. For centuries, the Phoenicians
and their descendants the Carthaginians ruled half of Sicily, a region contested by Greeks and then Romans. The Carthaginians
nearly defeated Rome. Here is the story of the conflict that changed the course of ancient Mediterranean
history, and the reason why the words you are reading are written in Latin characters rather than
Phoenician ones. Read more.

Syracuse: City of Legends by Jeremy Dummett. This is a
splendid, readable, illustrated overview of Siracusa, which rivalled Athens as the most important city of the
ancient Greek world. Read more.

Palermo: City of Kings by Jeremy Dummett. An eloquent follow-up to the author's book
about Syracuse. Read more.

The Normans in Sicily: The Normans in the
South 1016-1130 and the Kingdom in the Sun 1130-1194 by John Julius Norwich. If you thought the Norman
conquerors of Sicily and England were long buried, this landmark work will bring them to life in vivid detail.
Actually a recent omnibus edition combining two of Norwich's books written in the 1960s, The Normans in Sicily chronicles the Conquest of Sicily
("The Other Conquest") in breathtaking detail. Read more. The two separate volumes are usually in print: The Normans in the South and The Kingdom in the Sun.

The Norman Kingdom of Sicily by Donald Matthew.
Published by Cambridge University Press, this book is a useful complementary work to the Norwich and Runciman books
reviewed here (and Houben's too). In just over 400 pages, Professor Matthew describes the economic, political and social development of
the Kingdom of Sicily under the Normans. Read more.

Roger II of Sicily: A Ruler Between East and West by Hubert Houben.
Best biography in print of the Norman king who led Sicily into its multicultural Golden
Age. Read more.

Frederick II: A Medieval Emperor by David Abulafia. His
death in the middle of the thirteenth century signalled the end of an era in Sicily. Frederick, grandson of Roger II, was the greatest monarch of
the 13th century. This defining work, the best biography ever written of this unique monarch, is great but not always in print. Nevertheless,
the only book you should think about reading if you want to learn more about Sicily's most famous monarch. Read more.

The Sicilian Vespers: A History of the Mediterranean World in the
Later Thirteenth Century by Steven Runciman. Classic, defining work on the medieval revolution that changed European history.
This erudite author's fluid prose style, at once scholarly and literary, makes this unique book as entertaining as it is
informative, a measure by which other medieval studies are judged. Its sweeping European and Mediterranean context leaves nothing to be desired. Read more.

Four Queens: The Provençal Sisters Who Ruled Europe by Nancy Goldstone. Fascinating
parallel biographies of four 13th-century sisters who married the kings of France, England, Germany and Sicily (the island was then ruled from Naples). This
very readable history traces many of the events leading to the Sicilian Vespers while providing a realistic glimpse of the Middle Ages. Frederick II,
Manfred of Sicily, Peter of Aragon, France's saintly Louis IX (whose heart reposes
in Monreale Abbey) and his nasty little brother Charles Anjou of Naples all play a role in a magnificent tapestry that shatters the stereotype of
medieval women as helpless damsels. A fine complement to Runciman's book. If Ms Goldstone didn't exist, we'd probably have to invent her. Read more.

Women of Sicily: Saints, Queens and Rebels by Jacqueline Alio. Significantly, the first book about the historical
women of Sicily – mostly before 1500 – written in English in the original by a Sicilian woman based in Sicily. (The author will be known to this
site's more avid readers/followers.) While it is intended for a general readership, the breezy narrative reflects a scholarly perspective. An appendix is
dedicated to the status of Sicilian women today, and an introductory chapter provides enough background for the reader to understand Sicilian history
generally. This book is an uncommon entry into the fray. Read more.

Joanna: The Notorious Queen of Naples & Sicily by Nancy Goldstone. Also published as The Lady Queen, this is the
story of brave, brillaint Joan Anjou of Naples (1326-1382), generally considered the first woman in Europe to rule in her own right. The title of book and queen are
slightly misleading; for the most part Joanna claimed Sicily without ruling it, because the island was actually ruled by the House
of Aragon after 1282. However, the text does describe the contested island kingdom's chaotic interregnum of the 14th century and the intrigues
of the so-called "Four Vicars" including the cunning Chiaramonte clan. Joanna's foray onto the island, at Messina in 1356, led to her
brief control of a small piece of it. Read more.

Modern History (post-1500)

The Pursuit of Italy: A History of a Land, Its Regions, and Their Peoples by
David Gilmour. Superlative history of Italy and its regions, with half the book dedicated to the centuries since
1800. Revealing. Read more.

The Force of Destiny: A History of Italy Since 1796 by Christopher Duggan. Detailed,
sometimes disturbing, look at Italian unification, the controversial Risorgimento, by an eminent
historian. Read more.

Italy and Its Monarchy by Denis Mack Smith. This masterful,
eloquent account of who Italy's monarchs were and what they got up to (usually something not very edifying)
demonstrates once again why Mack Smith is widely viewed as the leading authority on Italy writing in the English
language. Read more.

Under the Volcano: Revolution in a Sicilian Town by Lucy Riall. This opus details the ruthless massacre at Bronte, in eastern Sicily, by Nino Bixio
in 1860. Based on masterful research, Professor Riall's book covers enough history to provide ample context. Published in 2012 by Oxford University Press (there is also an Italian edition),
this is a sober – and sobering – account of what actually took place. Read more.

Terroni: All that has been done to ensure that the Italians of the South became 'southerners'
by Pino Aprile. Italian bestseller that confronts the realities of (and reasons for) Italy's
regionalism. Read more.

The Dark Heart of Italy: An incisive portrait of Europe's most
beautiful, most disconcerting country by Tobias Jones. Fascinating look at today's Italy, though
Sicily figures very little in this candid portrait of life in this fascinating
country. Read more.

Bitter Victory: The Battle for Sicily 1943 by Carlo d'Este.
Detailed, definitive history of the Allied invasion of 1943 and the events leading up to it. A magnificent
work. Read more.

The Day of Battle: The war in Sicily and Italy 1943-1944 by Rick Atkinson.
A more general history than Carlo d'Este's, but Atkinson places the war in a slightly larger context. Candid, insightful
and a good complement to other books on the subject. Highly recommended. Read more.

Operation Mincemeat by Ben Macintyre. Military history at its best. As lively as a spy
novel, this book recounts the secret mission that preceded the invasion of Sicily in 1943 and inspired a young Ian Fleming, one of
the naval officers who masterminded it, to create James Bond. Read more.

The Battle of Sicily: How the Allies lost their chance for total victory by Samuel Mitcham
and Friedrich von Stauffenberg. A fine analysis which supplements other histories of this subject, this work considers
the strategy of the Allies and the effective defensive tactics of the German forces. Good military history. Read more.

Midnight in Sicily by Peter Robb. The title of this debut book by an Australian author
who lived and taught in Italy for 14 years refers to the events which open and close its time frame - the hour
the Allies landed on the Sicilian coast on a night in July 1943, and the sober trial of former Prime Minister Giulio
Andreotti for Mafia association in Palermo from 1997 to 1999. The Andreotti prosecution was less successful than the
Allies' efforts; the lifetime politician was acquitted following this book's publication. Insightful, even
revealing, and Italian politics hasn't changed much in recent years. Read more.

Octopus: The long reach of the international Sicilian Mafia by Claire Sterling.
Slightly dated (it was published in 1990) but a good general survey of organized crime in
Sicily. Read more.

Excellent Cadavers: The Mafia and the Death of the First Republic by Alexander Stille.
Solid work dealing with organized crime and its connections to the Italian government into the mid-1990s (a few such
connections probably remain and the government is still infamously corrupt). Good English treatment of the Mafia during that period and the murders of judges Falcone and
Borsellino. At almost 500 pages, quite detailed. Read more.

The Sicilian Mafia: The Business of Private Protection by Diego Gambetta.
Here the focus is on the Mafia's commercial side, which is becoming increasingly
important. A sound analysis though slightly dated (1996). Read more.

The Last Godfathers by John Follian. A very good overview, some
biographies and up-to-date information, published in 2009. Follian does an exceptional job at analysis and explanation. This is
one of the better studies of the Mafia as it is today, with a more-or-less complete cast of criminal characters,
including a few infamous fugitives. Read more.

Genealogy and Family History

Sicilian Genealogy and Heraldry by Louis Mendola. First published in 2013, this is the only book about
Sicilian family history research, and indeed the first book of its kind written in English with a focus on a specific Italian region. An excellent guide, and
perhaps the cornerstone of a personal library dealing with Sicilian genealogical research. While all researchers will benefit, it is
written for professionals or very dedicated amateurs. There are no pictures of actual records as the author presumes that most
readers, being somewhat experienced, will have at least a perfunctory knowledge of Italian. Plenty of information packed into a 300-page book which, were
it not for its rather small print, might have run to 500 pages. Read more.

The Leopard by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa. (Historical Fiction) Translated
by Archibald Colquhoun. (Fiction) Published in Italy in 1958 following its author's death, The Leopard rapidly
climbed the international bestseller lists in 1961. The author, a Sicilian nobleman, weaves a fabulously rich tapestry
of Sicilian aristocratic life around 1860, when the unification movement interrupts more than a century of Bourbon
rule by the Kings of Naples. As the Kingdom of Naples (or the Two Sicilies) comes to an end, a new order arrives, but
is it nothing more than the Old Order in new clothes? Read our special review of this
classic novel. (Read about the author's biography in the following section.) Read more on Amazon.

Cavalleria Rusticana and Other Stories by Giovanni
Verga. Translated by G. H. McWilliam. (Traditional Fiction) A new translation of the greatest Italian short story writer since Boccaccio.
Born into a well-to-do Sicilian family in Vizzini (near Catania), Giovanni Verga (1840-1922) became an active observer
of Milanese salon society in the 1870s and 1880s but eventually found in the everyday lives of Sicilian peasants the
inspiration for his finest narratives. Read more.

Six Characters in Search of an Author and Other Plays by Luigi Pirandello.
Translated by Mark Musa. (Traditional Fiction) Sicilian-born Luigi Pirandello (1867-1936) is best known in the English-speaking world for
his radical challenge to traditional Western theatre with plays such as "Six Characters in Search of an
Author." But theatre is just one aspect of this Nobel laureate's experiments with language which constituted a
distinguished collection of novels, short stories, and essays as well as his work for a film industry then in its
infancy. Pirandello believed in the primacy of the literary character in a creative process fraught with internal
conflicts. Read more.

Open Doors and Three Novellas by Leonardo Sciascia. Translated by Sacha
Ravinovitch and Marie Evans. (Fiction) He was one of Sicily's most eminent authors. Leonardo Sciascia, who died in
1989, wrote most of his fiction in the 1960s and 1970s. Much of it dealt with his longstanding fascination with
important moral issues in politics, the law, and Fascism. Certain metaphysical themes appeared every now and then.
Sciascia posed good moral questions that nobody will ever answer perfectly. Read more.

The Day of the Owl by Leonardo Sciascia. (Fiction) This might be described as early Italian
Mafia fiction, circa 1961, a kind of metaphysical mystery set in rural Sicily, nothing like Mario Puzo's
stylized, American Godfather series. At 140 pages, entertaining and fast-paced. Read more.

Sicilian Dynasty by Daniela Di Benedetto. (Contemporary Fiction) First published
in Italian as L'Erede, this novel tells the story of a wealthy agricultural family whose fortunes change through personal tragedy, the threat of the Mafia and a touch of disloyalty. Told from the parallel perspectives of a husband and wife, the
journey takes the reader along a path full of twists and turns. Antonio, the protagonist, must confront all kinds of challenges among his family and friends but, as is so often the case, his worst demons live within himself. Set late in the twentieth century and
spanning two decades, Sicilian Dynasty reflects the stark realities of Sicily faced by many people during those times.
It is their reactions, ranging from disillusion to denial, that make this an interesting psychological study. This is one of
just a few mainstream novels by Sicilian women to find their way into hard copy in English, reaching an international readership (those by Lara Cardella and Melissa Panarello follow).
Read more.

Good Girls Don't Wear Trousers by Lara Cardella.
Translated by Diana Di Carcaci. (Fiction) Living in a remote Sicilian town in the early 1960s, Annetta, barely
thirteen years old, doesn't dream of the romantic prince who will carry her away from an eternal boredom. Instead, the
young narrator dreams of wearing pants rather than the "mandatory" dress or skirt. She imagines that this
will liberate her from the stifling atmosphere that permeates the village of her birth. But the Women's Movement is still
years away... Read more.

Behind Closed Doors: Her Father's House and Other Stories by Maria Messina.
(Traditional Fiction) Set in the early twentieth century, these recently-translated stories were written by one of just a handful of Sicilian
women whose work was published before 1930 (Messina died in 1944). They speak to the struggles and realities of those times.
Read more.

Death in Bagheria by Susan Russo Anderson. (Historical Fiction) In this gripping tale of murder and deceit,
a baroness is poisoned and a family in western Sicily in 1870 stands to have its darkest, most intimate secrets revealed. Serafina Florio is a
midwife-turned-sleuth who seeks to unravel the mystery. (This is not, strictly speaking, "native" Sicilian fiction as it isn't a
work in translation; the author, though descended from Sicilians, is American.) Read more.

One Hundred Strokes of the Brush Before Bed by Melissa Panarello.
Translated by Lawrence Venuti. (Erotic Fiction) This is the bestselling Sicilian novel since The Leopard.
Influenced by the work of Anais Nin, it is both erotic and literary. An instant blockbuster in Italy, where it has
sold over 700,000 copies, though some critics have noted that as "erotica" it does not always live up to the
standards of its genre. Read more.

The Shape of Water by Andrea Camilleri, translation by Stephen Sartarelli.
(Fiction) Urbane Sicilian police inspector Salvo Montalbano makes his long overdue English-language debut in this spare and spry
English translation of the first novel in the series. Read more.

The Terra Cotta Dog by Andrea Camilleri, translation by Stephen Sartarelli.
(Fiction) This story opens with the inspector's mysterious tete-à-tete with a mafioso, some inexplicably
abandoned loot from a supermarket heist, and dying words that lead Montalbano to an illegal arms cache in a mountain
cave. Read more.

Mythology

The Greek Myths by
Robert Graves. The Greek myths, some of which are set in Sicily, are the earliest surviving Sicilian literature. This book,
with its scholarly language, is the standard reference our writers consult. Read more.

Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes by
Edith Hamilton. An excellent, readable guide to the Greek myths, another reliable "go to"
reference. This is a superb introduction to classical mythology. Read more.

People, Biography, Memoir, Life in Sicily

Sicilian Shadows by Francesco Scannella. (Memoir) Recounting the story of a ten year-old boy in a town
in west-central Sicily during two years around 1970, this is without
doubt the best childhood memoir set in Sicily ever published in English. Gritty, blunt and disquieting, it tells a tale of violence, backwardness
and many other things that most of today's Sicilians would prefer to forget. Indeed, hardly anybody born in Sicily after 1980 has any sense
that the place was so primitive so recently, with perhaps just a few telephones and televisions in the typical rural locality of several thousand residents. Not
only is this disturbing account compelling, it makes most of the books that follow in this list – and certainly most of the fiction mentioned
on this page – look, by comparison, like bland candy packaged for ignorant masses unprepared to learn about the real Sicily. Bizarre as it may occasionally seem, this book is the main course. The true
story culminates in the murder of a Mafioso's teenage son which (though this is not made clear in the narrative) led to a succession of five brutal reprisal killings over
the next few months. Scannella's insightful book works at so many subtle levels – Sicily's relative poverty as part of the "new" Italy after 1860,
the nobility's exploitation of the poor, the effects of Fascism, bigotry against Italians living abroad in the 1960s, immigration and cultural assimilation, social class division, rampant illiteracy –
that it would take a team of anthropologists and historians to analyze it completely. Sure, you could read those cute, overly-praised "slice-of-life" books
written by certain "Siculo-American" visitors about the same general region of Sicily who mistakenly thought they actually knew our island, but Scannella's
personal story, told from a bicultural Italian/British perspective that permits accurate comparisons between two European societies, is the real deal. He is not writing to
flatter anybody. More importantly, if you think this story is just about children, think again. Be warned: This book is not for the faint of heart!Read more.

Mattanza: Love and Death in the Sea of Sicily by
Theresa Maggio. (Memoir) This is a magnificent journey inside the world of a Sicilian fishing community and its
thousand-year-old rituals. Every spring for untold centuries, great schools of giant bluefin tuna have swum through
the Strait of Gibraltar to spawn in the Mediterranean Sea. And there, for untold centuries, men have been waiting for
them. In this stunning debut, Theresa Maggio brings us inside the insular world of the "tonnara" – the
ritual trapping and killing of bluefin enacted by fishermen since the Stone Age. Read more.

The Stone Boudoir: Travels
Through the Hidden Villages of Sicily by Theresa Maggio. (Travel and
Memoir) It's not exactly a sequel to Mattanza (see above), but this
book offers some interesting, and not always flattering, firsthand views of life
in rural Sicily, with occasional forays into larger urban areas (the Mondello
mentioned is actually part of Palermo). Masterfully expresed in the most minute
details, with insights into the lives of women and the challenges faced by those
now in their thirties or forties in a man's society Read more.

On Persephone's Island: A Sicilian Journal by Mary Taylor
Simeti. (Memoir) This is the ambivalent love story of an intelligent, complex, and
self-reflective woman. The book recounts the events of 1983, the year Simeti turned 42. Her narrative alternates
between Palermo, where her children attend school and her husband is a professor of agricultural economy, and Bosco,
in eastern Sicily, where she shoulders demanding responsibilities on the working farm that has belonged to her
husband's family for several generations. Simeti feels the isolation of being an expatriate and outsider, although she
claims to welcome this perspective when faced with frustration and disgust at the pervading political corruption and
corrosive effects of the Mafia on everyday life. Despite her natural diffidence, she shares personal insights that
make the goddess Persephone's island as compelling as her prose. Written 30 years ago, this book
is slightly dated in our era of cell phones, the internet and satellite television, but still a great
read. Read more.

A House in Sicily by Daphne Phelps. (Memoir) Near Mount Etna lies Casa
Cuseni, a beautiful house built in golden stone – and the home which Daphne Phelps was astonished to find she had
inherited in 1947. War-weary from working as a psychiatric social worker, with barely any Italian and precious little
money, she plunged into a fascinating Sicilian world. The many problems to be overcome included not only financial
difficulties but local authorities and a house staff who initially felt no loyalty to the new Signorina, but who
gradually accepted her as a respected member of their small community. To help make ends meet, for many years Daphne
Phelps ran Casa Cuseni as a small hotel. To her doors came Roald Dahl, Tennessee Williams, Bertrand Russell and the
painter Henry Faulkner. Read more.

Casa Nostra: A home in Sicily by Caroline Seller Manzo. A
more recent series of experiences than those of Ms Phelps (above) and with a slightly different emphasis and
twist. Read more.

In Sicily by Norman Lewis. A distinct departure from the "chic lit" of
the other books reviewed in this section (above), this is a series of experiences over many years by a gentleman who knows the island as well as
any foreigner ever could. Plenty of history, culture and insight. Book has a detailed index. Read more.

Seeking Sicily by John Keahy. A good complement to Norman Lewis' book,
and in some respects more personal, perhaps less "scholarly" but more current, with a finger
on the pulse of today's Sicily. This book has a good index. Read more.

The Last Leopard: A life of Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa by David Gilmour. While this is
obviously an insightful biography of the aristocrat who has become Sicily's most widely-read author internationally, it is also
a probing look at what it was like to live in Sicily during Fascism and the decade following its fall, seen
through the eyes of one of the few Sicilian intellectuals who was not compromised by association with the
regime. Through his fictional characters, Tomasi was one of the first authors in Italy to openly question the Risorgimento movement that united Italy
a century before the publication of The Leopard.Read more.

Art and Architecture

Palaces of Sicily by Angheli Zalapì, with an Introduction
by Gioacchino Lanza Tomasi. Photography by Melo Minnella. Stunning. In slightly over 300 pages full of beautiful color photographs and
flawlessly descriptive text, the authors take us on a journey to some of Sicily's most stupendous homes, almost never
open to the public. The original Italian title of this book, published in 1998, is Dimore di Sicilia, literally
&quotSicilian Residences," and that's probably more accurate than "Palaces" since these aren't just
Baroque palaces but also medieval castles, aristocratic country homes, and an ancient country villa (namely the Roman
one at Piazza Armerina). Minnella's photographs and Zalapi's text also introduce us to royal palaces old and new --the
Royal Palace and the Zisa of the Norman kings, and the Chinese Villa of Ferdinando I (Bourbon) of the Two Sicilies.
Interiors as well as exteriors. A few of the aristocratic residences included are the castles of Mussomeli and
Paternò, the Steri Castle in Palermo, Villa Palagonia in
Bagheria Read more.

Cooking, Culinary Culture & History

Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert. The last leg of her culinary
journey (in Italy) takes the author to Sicily, specifically Siracusa, Taormina and Palermo. This
detail (unfortunately) didn't make it into the film starring Julia Roberts. Read more.

Pomp and Sustenance: 25 Centuries of Sicilian Food by
Mary Taylor Simeti. In the last few years, it has become very stylish to write cookbooks that offer not just recipes
and cooking methods, but also interesting details about the history and traditions of the culture whose food is
described. This book does it very well. In Pomp and Sustenance (also published as Sicilian
Food), you'll learn how to prepare some classic Sicilian dishes, as well as a few lesser-known ones, but you'll
also discover something about the culture that spawned this unique cuisine. Like polyglot Sicilian history itself,
Sicilian cuisine is a phenomenon that brings together the influences of all the societies that conquered or colonized
the island. Even within Sicily, however, the cuisine has regional variations. Read more.

Sicilian Food and Wine: The Cognoscente's Guide by
Francesca Lombardo with Jacqueline Alio. It's not a cook book, except for a dozen classic recipes
the authors felt compelled to include. This is a general guide to Sicilian cuisine. Unlike many such books, this one dedicates ample space to wines, olive oils and geography. Yet
its focus is not a particular author's Sicilian identity or quest for self-discovery through food, "personality driven" topics that seem to have hijacked many
otherwise good, well-written books about Sicilian cookery. For Lombardo and Alio – the former
is a certified sommelier – the food and its history are more than enough to make your culinary adventure
interesting. Here the star of the show is always the food, not the authors. This is a very factual book, describing authentic traditions without the urban legends
and folklore that influence common perceptions about Sicily's complex, delicious cuisine. This volume has a very simple format that makes it easy to find what
you're looking for, in the book and in Sicily. Read more.

The Heart of Sicily: Recipes and Reminiscences of Regaleali, a Country Estate
by Anna Tasca Lanza. Photography by Franco Zecchin. Many cookbooks tempt, inform, and inspire. A few
capture the essence of a place, but rarely does a cookbook communicate the very soul of a place. In more than 200 pages and over 100
photographs, the late Anna Tasca Lanza's telling of life at Regaleali, the vast country estate that has belonged to her family
since 1830, is so vivid that you feel her sitting next to you, talking and turning the pages as if it were a photo
album. Read more.

Gangivecchio's Sicilian Kitchen (La Cucina Siciliana di Gangivecchio) by Wanda
Tornabene, Giovanna Tornabene and Michele Evans. So much has been written, produced, and marketed in recent years
about the glories of northern Italian cooking that people have ignored the accomplishments of the cooks of southern
Italy, especially those of the island of Sicily. Giovanna Tornabene opened a restaurant in her home in the scenic
Madonie Mountains of Sicily in 1978 because it seemed the only way to hold on to her family's centuries-old
estate. Read more.

Sicily Before History: An Archaeological Survey from the
Palaeolithic to the Iron Age by Robert Leighton. Students and travelers to Sicily will welcome this
inviting introduction to the archaeology of the Mediterranean's largest island. In the first English-language book on
prehistoric Sicily in over forty years, Robert Leighton explores the region's rich archaeological record. He charts
the development of Sicily's early cultures from the Palaeolithic onward, concluding with an account of the indigenous
society at the time of Greek and Phoenician settlement in the 8th century BC (BCE). Read more.

Syracuse, City of Legends by Jeremy Dummett. More than a
history serving a generous portion of ancient archeology, this is a
splendid, illustrated guide to Siracusa. Read more.